Sick: Seven Diseases That Changed Brooklyn

August 1st, 2017 - August 31st, 2019 | PROJECT

BHS is requesting NEH funds to support its newest exhibition, Sick: Seven Diseases That Changed Brooklyn, which, along with complementary education programs, public programs, and a project website, aims to reveal to diverse audiences that conceptions of illness and health are a manifestation of not just biology, but beliefs, institutions, and identity. Sick will use Brooklyn’s rich history to show how concepts of illness and wellness have transformed over 400 years with a focus on seven different diseases. Topics range from smallpox and Native Americans in the seventeenth century; to devastating nineteenth-century outbreaks of cholera in the growing city of Brooklyn; to pharmaceutical innovations that would grow into global corporations; to local doctors and nurses, activists, and communities who fought disease and redefined caregiving; to the experiences of a diverse group of borough residents and their families during the earliest days of HIV/AIDS; and more.

Project Website(s)

(no project website provided)

Team Members

Julie Golia, Principal Investigator, Brooklyn Historical Society

Funders

Funding Source: NEH
Funding Program: Exhibitions: Implementation
Award Number: GI-256212-17
Funding Amount: $250,000

Tags

Audience: General Public | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Health and medicine | History | policy | law
Resource Type: Project Descriptions
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits